In the Missouri Court of Appeals
Eastern District
WRIT DIVISION FIVE
STATE ex rel. BRANDT HEADRICK, ) No. ED108444
)
Relator, ) Writ of Prohibition
)
vs. ) Circuit Court of Cape Girardeau County
) Cause No. 17CG-CC00313
HON. BENJAMIN F. LEWIS, )
)
Respondent. ) Filed: December 31, 2019
OPINION
Relator Brandt Headrick is the plaintiff in the underlying medical negligence action filed
against St. Francis Medical Center (“Defendant”). Relator alleges that he fell and struck his head
as a result of Defendant’s negligence, and that he has consequently suffered total loss of his sense
of smell and partial loss of his sense of taste. Defendant moved for Respondent Judge Benjamin
F. Lewis to order that Relator submit to testing to determine whether and to what degree he has
lost his senses of smell and taste. On October 9, 2019, Respondent ordered Relator to undergo “a
test accomplished by swallowing or injection of a dye-like fluid in order to make an objective
determination of [his] loss of smell and taste.”
Relator filed with this Court a petition for a writ of prohibition asserting that Respondent
exceeded his authority in ordering the test. Respondent answered and filed suggestions in
opposition. We issued a preliminary writ of prohibition, and now dispense with further briefing
and oral argument in accordance with Rule 84.24(i).
Respondent purported to order the test pursuant to the authority conferred by Rule 60.01,
which provides in relevant part that a trial court may order a physical examination of a party in an
action where that party’s physical condition is in controversy. Relator contends, however, that
Respondent failed to comply with the following requirements of subsection (a)(3) of Rule 60.01:
Any order under this Rule 60.01(a) may be made only on motion for good cause shown,
upon notice to the person against whom the order is sought and to all other parties. Such
order shall specify the time, place, manner, conditions, scope of, and identity of each person
conducting the examination or evaluation.
The pleadings alone are generally sufficient to meet the good cause and in controversy
requirements where the condition is the subject matter of the suit or the basis for damages. State
ex rel. C.S. v. Dowd, 923 S.W.2d 444, 447 (Mo. App. E.D. 1996). Indeed, a plaintiff, by asserting
a mental or physical injury, “places that mental or physical injury clearly in controversy and
provides the defendant with good cause for an examination to determine the existence and extent
of such asserted injury.” Id. (citing Schlagenhauf v. Holder, 379 U.S. 104, 119 (1964)).
However, even where the good cause requirement is met, Rule 60.01(a)(3) also directs that
the court “shall specify the time, place, manner, conditions, scope of, and identity of each person
conducting the examination . . . .” Looking to Respondent’s order and the record here, we agree
with Relator that Respondent exceeded his authority by failing to comply with this requirement to
specify critical facts about the ordered examination. This procedural safeguard is no mere
technicality, as it protects Relator’s due process rights including his constitutional right to bodily
integrity identified by the United States Supreme Court in such cases as Washington v. Harper,
494 U.S. 210, 221–222 (1990); Winston v. Lee, 470 U.S. 753, 760-62 (1985); and Rochin v.
California, 342 U.S. 165, 165-74 (1952). And where, as here, the trial court has denied a party
the full protections of Rule 60.01, we cannot conclude that the court acted within its authority.
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There is no dispute that the testing Respondent ordered would be to some extent physically
invasive, as it would require ingestion or injection of an unidentified substance described only as
a “dye-like fluid.” Relator has objected to the testing on the grounds that it may pose a health risk,
though he cannot be certain of such since there was no evidence identifying the substance to be
introduced into his body. Respondent, however, concluded that the test would only be “minimally
invasive,” on the grounds that there was no evidence before the court that the testing posed any
known risk to Relator.
But Respondent failed to specify the “manner, conditions, [and] scope of” the ordered
testing since he did not identify and the record contains no identification of the substance to be
ingested by or injected into Relator. This was a critical piece of information without which
Respondent could not possibly have ascertained the risks the testing posed to Relator. And while
Rule 60.01 did not explicitly require Respondent to balance the risks to Relator against the
probative value of the ordered testing, cf., e.g., Il Grande v. DiBenedetto, 841 A.2d 974, 977, 981
(N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2004)(applying New Jersey court rules requiring such balancing when
ordering an independent medical examination over the objections of the party to be examined),
Respondent’s failure to identify the “dye-like fluid” involved in the testing ordered here vitiated
the due-process protections that Rule 60.01 affords when it is followed as it is written.
We are also troubled by the paucity of evidence that the ordered testing will produce
reliable results. The only record support for that notion is Defendant’s assertion based on the
representations of the doctor slated to perform the test that it “is very simple and reliable.” But
reliability sufficient to support expert conclusions at trial requires a showing of “reliable principles
and methods and reliable application thereof.” State ex rel. Gardner v. Wright, 562 S.W.3d 311,
319 (Mo. App. E.D. 2018)(citing § 490.065.2(1)(b)-(d))(noting requirements for admission of
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expert testimony under amended statute). And there has been no substantive showing that the
ordered testing will be administered according to reliable principles and methods here. Moreover,
while Defendant asserts that “[t]he Rule does not require an exhaustive summary of the medical
process,” to require that a substance be identified that is to be ingested by or injected into Relator
by court order, is not to demand an “exhaustive summary” of a testing procedure.
Therefore, we grant Relator’s requested relief because Respondent acted in excess of his
authority by failing to satisfy Rule 61.01(a)(3)’s requirement to specify critical details of the
ordered testing. The preliminary order in prohibition is made permanent and respondent is
prohibited from enforcing his order of October 9, 2019.
_________________________________
Angela T. Quigless, Presiding Judge
James M. Dowd, J., concurs.
Kurt S. Odenwald, J., concurs.
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